Pulmonary blood flow distribution has a hilar-to-peripheral gradient in awake, prone sheep |
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Authors: | Walther, Sten M. Domino, Karen B. Glenny, Robb W. Polissar, Nayak L. Hlastala, Michael P. |
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Abstract: | Walther, Sten M., Karen B. Domino, Robb W. Glenny, Nayak L. Polissar, and Michael P. Hlastala. Pulmonary blood flow distribution has a hilar-to-peripheral gradient in awake, prone sheep.J. Appl. Physiol. 82(2): 678-685, 1997.We examined the pulmonary blood flow distribution withintravenous fluorescent microspheres (15 µm) in nine prone,unanesthetized, lambs. Lungs flushed free of blood were air-dried attotal lung capacity and sectioned into~2-cm3 pieces. The pieces wereweighed, identified by lobe, and assigned spatial coordinates.Fluorescence was read on a spectrophotometer, and signals werecorrected for piece weight and normalized to mean flow. Pulmonary bloodflow heterogeneity was assessed by using the coefficient of variationof the flow data. The number of pieces (±SD) analyzed were 1,249 ± 150/animal. Heterogeneity of blood flow was 29.5 ± 6.5%(coefficient of variation = SD/mean). Pulmonary blood flow decreasedwith distance from hilus (P < 0.002) but did not change significantly with vertical height. Distance fromthe hilus was the best predictor of pulmonary blood flow (R2 = 0.201) and,together with spatial coordinates and lobe, accounted for 33.7 ± 12.0% of blood flow variability. We conclude that pulmonary blood flowin the awake, prone sheep is distributed with a hilar-to-peripheral gradient but no significant vertical gradient. |
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